Chinese President Xi Jinping vowed on Wednesday to strengthen and modernise the military and to stamp out corruption within the ruling Communist Party.
Xi underscored the importance of a βstrong militaryβ in a speech to political and military leaders as well as Chinese Communist Party members gathered at the Great Hall of the People for the partyβs 105th founding anniversary.
Analysts have questioned the ability of Chinaβs armed forces to fight effectively since Xiβs sweeping anti-graft campaign gutted its top ranks.
Xiβs years-long effort to purge corruption has brought down two defence ministers in the past three years and reduced the once seven-member Central Military Commission β Chinaβs top military body β to just himself and one other general.
The Chinese leader on Wednesday swore to βuphold the partyβs absolute leadershipβ over the armed forces and strengthen the military.
βWe must advance the modernisation of national defence and the armed forces,β Xi told party members.
The CCP also has to βresolutely wage the critical, protracted, and comprehensive battle against corruptionβ, he added.
The Central Military Commission β which Xi heads β has published new measures that would βestablish iron rules for strict education, strict management, and strict supervisionβ of senior military cadres, state media reported in May.
Xi also reiterated on Wednesday his commitment to see China gain control of Taiwan, the self-ruled island Beijing claims as its territory.
βResolving the Taiwan question and realising the complete unification of the motherland is an unswerving historical mission of our party and the shared aspiration of all Chinese people,β he said.
Xi urged his country to βoppose interference by external forcesβ, without naming any specific countries.
The CCP was founded on July 1, 1921 and had more than 101 million members as of late 2025, according to state news agency Xinhua.
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